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Don’t Neglect Your Balance Sheet

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Business owners tend to focus on increasing profit and driving down costs. While this is super important, you must not neglect your Balance Sheet. Your Balance Sheet is a key indicator of how solvent your business is.

 

Here are four key areas of your Balance Sheet to focus on:

1. Profitability.

There are seven ways to grow your business and increase profit:

  • Reduce overheads
  • Increase transaction frequency
  • Generate more leads
  • Increase customer retention
  • Convert more prospects
  • Increase transaction value
  • Reduce variable costs

Focus on one or two to increase the profitability of your business.

 

2. Cashflow.

Improving your cashflow can help your business weather any future downturns. Cash is king and the more cash you have in your business, the stronger it will be.

Focus on strategies to reduce your Cash Conversion Cycle; that is, the time your cash is tied up in your stock and accounts receivable. Negotiating better payment terms with your suppliers to preserve cash for longer, reducing inventory or work in progress, and minimising debtor days will all help build a stronger Balance Sheet by increasing your cash on hand.

 

3. Solvency.

Maintaining solvency is essential to the success of your business. There are two components of solvency:

  • The ability to pay your debts as they fall due; and
  • Having greater assets than liabilities

To determine whether you can pay your debts as they fall due, calculate your current ratio by dividing your current assets by your current liabilities. A ratio less than 1 means you don’t have enough assets to pay your debts as they fall due and the business is insolvent.

The second part of the test is calculated by taking away your total assets from your total liabilities. A negative result means your business is insolvent and requires a short-term cash injection.

If your business is currently insolvent, action must be taken immediately to remedy this.

 

4. Shareholder Advance Accounts.

If your Shareholder Advance Account is a current asset on your Balance Sheet, the shareholders have taken more out of the business than what they’re entitled to. This is incredibly risky as, in the event the business fails, liquidators can call up this loan and your personal assets will be at risk. To avoid an overdrawn Shareholder Advance Account, revisit your personal budget to reduce the amount of drawings you’re taking from the business and stick to a regular amount each week or month.

It’s important that you secure any advances made to the business so that, in a liquidation, you stand a higher chance of getting your money back.

 

Have you been neglecting your Balance Sheet? Take some time to review your profitability, cashflow, solvency and Shareholder Advance Accounts. If you need help calculating your ratios or understanding what your Balance Sheet is telling you, get in touch!

Authors Logo

Katie Bryan was tired of the old-school, one-size-fits-all approach to accounting. She saw its potential to be so much more than just numbers—it could be the backbone of real growth, a source of strength for business owners driven to break new ground. Determined to do things differently, Katie dove headfirst into transforming the industry with fresh ideas, smart strategies, and an unwavering commitment to entrepreneurs like you. That’s how Propeller Advisory took off—starting small, building momentum, and thriving through genuine connections and word of mouth.

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